Run the example server via Start Menu->netpp->Run example server. A warning will appear and request you to unblock the service, possibly. Then, a small example netpp server is listening on your local machine.

If you did not download Python before installing netpp, the netpp installer will throw a warning, but still continue.

First steps

Windows10 netpp session

When you have started IDLE, first try to import the netpp module as shown in the screen shot. Then make a connection to your local example server using the .connect() method.

The .sync() command creates a local property tree with root node ‘r’. When first called, the device server is queried for all available properties, so this can take a long time on some systems. Once the query has completed, the tree is stored in a cache and is only reloaded, if the device properties have changed.

Note the message “using PWD for storage”. If you have no cache directory created, the cache will be installed in the current program’s working directory, which may not be desired. Create the folders ‘.netpp/cache’ in your home directory, then the warning will go away. If you ever need to manually delete the cache files, you will find them there.

Next, we are going to look at the properties. This is simply done the pythonish way using ‘dir’.

And last, we obtain a property value using the .get() method. Simple as that.

Using the Power shell

There are two command line utilities:

master: Simple command line demo tool for netpp access

netpp-cli: interactive netpp client

Open up a Power shell (or a legacy cmd.exe) and change directory to where your netpp binaries are installed, like

cd c:\Program Files (x86)\section5\netpp\bin

The master.exe is a very primitive command line tool for netpp device query. When run without arguments, it will display the available hubs and send out a broadcast on the local network for attached netpp devices. If your example server is running, you will see it listed. Try accessing it:

.\master TCP:192.168.56.1

and it will list the device’s properties.

The netpp-cli.exe is an interactive console with a bit more caching functionality and session character, i.e. when you made a connection, the device will reserve a session with you until you exit the CLI. This operation mode may be required on some more complex devices that work session based.

Make a connection to a device:

.\netpp-cli TCP:192.168.56.1

At the netpp prompt, type ‘?’. Now you can just get a property value by typing its property name, like Container.Test. When you append a value, you can change a property, likewise.

Process viewer/browser support

To use the predefined GUI process control based on the free pvbrowser (see github repository), you need a demo setup based on a modhub or another Linux embedded demo setup running a pvhub server. This assumes a netpp node setup with default design.

Start the pvbrowser on your PC

Enter the URL

pv://modhub/netpp:UDP:192.168.0.5:2016

into the pvbrowser for a direct connection to the netpp node (assuming default IP at 192.168.0.5). Replace ‘modhub’ by the IP address of your pvhub server host.